Google fails to remove hacked nude photos of Jennifer Lawrence

Google has tried but failed to remove two internet links showing Hollywood actress Jennifer Lawrence in all her beauty weeks after her legal team threatened to sue.

The internet giant has
successfully taken down a website that hosted the nude pictures
of the actress on Monday, but within hours the embarrassing
photo-takes were back online after the host changed the domain
name.

The failed attempt by Google follows a legal request filed on
Lawrence's behalf at Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp on September
24 asking the Silicon Valley company to remove links to the site.

Google is forced to shut down picture fapping search results
after on August 31, unidentified hackers released the first batch
of nude celebrity pictures. Culprits allegedly broke into iCloud
accounts and stole private photos of hundreds of people. The
images of Lawrence and many of her colleagues were then made
available to the general public via 4Chan online forum.

Following the massive leak a group of celebrities whose photos
were made public have threatened to sue Google for $100 million.

The letter to the Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin seen
by Page Six was penned by famous Hollywood lawyer Marty Singer,
accusing Google of "blatantly unethical behavior.”

“Because the victims are celebrities with valuable publicity
rights you do nothing - nothing but collect millions of dollars
in advertising revenue - as you seek to capitalize on this
scandal rather than quash it,” the letter allegedly stated.

Google since then has been battling to save the dignity of the
exposed celebrities. “We’ve removed tens of thousands of
pictures within hours of the requests being made – and we have
closed hundreds of accounts," a Google spokesperson said at
the time. "The internet is used for many good things.
Stealing people’s private photos is not one of them."

In the meantime in the new interview to Vanity Fair, Lawrence
says that she is extremely angry at Perez Hilton, a celebrity
blogger, who posted the private shots on his Web site before
taking them down. She says “People forget that we're
human.”

“He took it down because people got pissed, and that's the
only reason why. And then I had to watch his apology. And what he
basically said was ‘I just didn't think about it.’ ‘I just didn't
think about it’ is not an excuse. That is the exact issue
itself,” Lawrence told the magazine.

The FBI and Apple are both conducting investigations into the
hacking scandal of personal accounts thought to be connected to
the iCloud service.